Es ist kein Zufall, dass die These von der Überwindung der Dichotomien“von Kultur und Politik,
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Es ist kein Zufall, dass die These von der Überwindung der Dichotomien“von Kultur und Politik,

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Ulf Wuggenig Fragmentation and Cooptation On the problematic aspects of "hybridity" in oppositional art forms [05_2002] When it is said today - in general and in the concept of the discussion under the title hybrid?resistance in Linz - that "unproductive dichotomies" between culture and politics, art and resistance, artistic practice and political activism have been overcome, then the question arises as to the scope of theses like this. In the context of visual and conceptual art, their limitations become clear relatively quickly. In the past decade, contradictory developments in this area have been evident, for which a common denominator may still be found if they are considered in a more abstract way, specifically the dedifferentiation between artistic and other social fields. This dedifferentiation - a term that the cultural 1theorist Scott Lash developed contrary to the view, widespread particularly among sociological authors, that presumes an increasing differentiation of society into autonomous social subsystems - has not only been propelled by actors in the field of art. It is also the result of processes of the colonization of artistic fields from the outside. In this context, the economization of the social and the cultural could be called to 2mind, for instance, the logic of which has been discussed by theorists of governmentality studies following the later writings of Foucault. A partial aspect of this economization is the invasion ...

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Ulf Wuggenig
Fragmentation and Cooptation
On the problematic aspects of "hybridity" in oppositional art forms
[05_2002]
When it is said today - in general and in the concept of the discussion under the title
hybrid?resistance
in
Linz - that "unproductive dichotomies" between culture and politics, art and resistance, artistic practice
and political activism have been overcome, then the question arises as to the scope of theses like this. In
the context of visual and conceptual art, their limitations become clear relatively quickly.
In the past decade, contradictory developments in this area have been evident, for which a common
denominator may still be found if they are considered in a more abstract way, specifically the
dedifferentiation between artistic and other social fields. This dedifferentiation - a term that the cultural
theorist Scott Lash
1
developed contrary to the view, widespread particularly among sociological authors,
that presumes an increasing differentiation of society into autonomous social subsystems - has not only
been propelled by actors in the field of art. It is also the result of processes of the colonization of artistic
fields from the outside. In this context, the economization of the social and the cultural could be called to
mind, for instance, the logic of which has been discussed by theorists of governmentality studies
2
following the later writings of Foucault. A partial aspect of this economization is the invasion of
corporative power into the European fields of art (following the US American model), which has resulted
in a new type of "business artists". What distinguishes this type of artist is that he relatively willingly
places his cultural and symbolic capital at the disposal of actors in the economic field for their image
politics, among other things, for the symbolic affirmation of internal hierarchies, for motivating
employees, or for developing "innovative" ideas.
In extreme cases, the power of actors from the field of economics is meanwhile even sufficient to launch
entire art movements and to inscribe them in the history of art, as was evident in Britain with Charles
Saatchi and the "Young British Artists" (YBA). Angela McRobbie has described the aversion to theory and
the anti-intellectualism of this younger generation of artists, who were trained, in fact, at a center of
cultural studies and feminist theory (Goldsmiths College, London), how they crossed the borders of "art
and life" in the form of a post-ironic plundering of popular and youth culture, and also their
"culturepreneur" strategies that made them appear as "Thatcher's children" in the field of art. Although
the cynicism of these artists sponsored and pushed by Charles Saatchi may appear apolitical at first
glance, their integration in the hegemonial entrepreneur culture and in the "Cool Britannia" discourse of
identity politics does have political connotations that are not to be overlooked.
Although processes of the dedifferentiation of art, business, and politics could be observed in Britain in
the past decade, this is far from having overcome "unproductive dichotomies" in the sense of the thesis
outlined in this context at the start. On the contrary, according to McRobbie, political and activist art that
was still present in the 80s was marginalized through the YBAs.
3
During the 90s, the "privatization of culture" following the Anglo-Saxon model
4
was also promoted in
Germany, Austria and Switzerland. Unlike in Britain, however, trends of oppositional "political art" also
developed in these countries at the same time. Holger Kube Ventura, who has developed a survey of this
1
Scott Lash (1992): Sociology of Postmodernism. London.
2
Cf. Nikolas Rose, Peter Miller 1992): Political power beyond the State: problematics of government. In: British
Journal of Sociology, vol 43, pp. 173-205; Ulrich Bröckling, Susanne Krasmann, Thomas Lemke (Ed.) (2000):
Gouvernementalität. Studien zur Ökonomisierung des Sozialen. Frankfurt/Main.
3
Angela McRobbie (1999): In the Culture Society. Art, Fashion and Popular Music. London, p. 6ff. On the role of
Saatchi in British art of the 90s, see especially: Rita Hatton / John A. Walker (2000): Supercollector. A Critique of
Charles Saatchi. London.
4
Chin-tao Wu (2002): Privatising Culture. Corporate Art Intervention since the 80ies. London.
http://www.republicart.net
1
critical art, sees the main reason for the politicization of art in the slump in the art market in the early
90s.
5
This reductionist explanation, however, appears to be anything but convincing. The slump in the art
market affected the fields of art in all the western countries. A comparable politicization of art and art
discourse was not to be found, though, in Britain, France, Italy, or Spain.
To grasp the politicization of art in these countries as the "hybridization" of art and politics or to speak of
a "hybrid resistance", however, is not unproblematic. For before the concept of "hybridity" rose via the
reception of Bachtin to become one of the key concepts of cultural theory in recent years, there was a
long history of the racist use of this concept, of the race theories of the 19th century all the way to the
anti-Semitic and National-Socialist writings of the 20th century. The appropriation and redefinition of the
hybridity concept on the part of cultural theory authors such as Stuart Hall or Homi K. Bhabha was not
only linked with a rejection of the essentialist or coerced assimilation ideas originally connected to this
concept, but also to the idea of mutual penetration - in the interaction of center and periphery, for
instance, of the oppressed and the oppressor, of hegemonial and subversive forces.
6
Especially this
aspect of the redefined concept of hybridity seems to me to be heuristically and theoretically interesting,
because it draws attention to the important question of the extent, to which "resistance" still adheres to
the logic of the system that it opposes. The term "hybrid resistance" used in this sense would thus refer
to a form of oppositional practice that is linked to the side effect of reproducing basic system structures.
This kind of "hybridity" of oppositional art may be recognized, in my opinion, primarily in two respects. A
large part of artistic production that has emerged in conjunction with the protests against the Austrian
government, but also within the framework of the anti-globalization movement, follows an "actor-
oriented" perspective in a fairly obvious way.
7
It prefers to devote itself to the representation of collective
political rituals, those of founding solidarity as well as those of applying violence, and it draws attentions
to "good" or "bad" actors, whether these are individuals, groups or organizations. By fixing on concrete
entities (such as individuals and groups) and their intentions, by concentrating on discontinuous acts and
events - especially direct violence - and by privileging symbolic political events, which essentially take
place on the front stage of politics, this type of artistic production is in danger of repeating the structural
blindness of the hegemonial media discourse and its basic idea that the world is essentially to be
understood through recourse to actors.
The structural features of hierarchical social systems include the tendency to reproduce themselves
through hindering horizontal interaction at the basis and through processes of the separation and
cooptation of anti-systemic opposition movements. Considerable resources and energy are required, in
any case, to resist this fragmentation and incorporation pressure. If Kube Ventura's diagnosis of a
"desolidarization" in the field of political art is right, then fragmentation and cooptation once again
threaten to become the fate of oppositional art. This is the second aspect of its hybridity, of which it may
not be sufficiently aware, in order to develop adequate counterstrategies in time.
Translated by Aileen Derieg
5
Holger Kube Ventura (2002): Politische Kunst Begriffe in den 1990er Jahren im deutschsprachigen Raum. Wien, p.
88ff.
6
cf. Bhabha, Homi K. (1993): The Location of Culture. London-New York; and for a critical discussion of the hybridity
concept: Robert Young (1995): Colonial Desire. Hybridity in Theory, Culture, and Race. London.
7
On the distinction between an actor-oriented and structure-oriented perspective of the world, cf. Johan Galtung
(1994): Human Rights in another Key. Cambridge-Oxford, pp. 27ff.
http://www.republicart.net
2
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